
Phenomenally Good Sounding White Hot Stamper Pressings Available Now
Dear Tom,
Yesterday I got to have an experience I’ll bet very few people – apart from you and your staff, of course – have ever had: a White Hot Stamper shootout!
My buddies David and Bill have amassed themselves quite a collection of Better Records, and among us, we now have multiple WHSs of the same titles. What an incredible bounty. Also, we’ve all copied your stereo, with Robert’s guidance and fine-tuning, to the best of our abilities. This allows us to do some dead-serious listening and comparing.
What did I learn? First, you are rock-solid reliable. A White Hot Stamper is a White Hot Stamper. They are all simply incredible sounding records.
Which leads me to rule #2: No two records sound the same. Yes, that even goes for white hot stampers. One copy will have better placement of the musicians; the other copy will have a richer tone. All white hot stampers sound fantastic, and also, they all sound subtly different. It’s just an amazing thing to hear for yourself.
Third, the stamper is only a part of the puzzle. The pressing is only a part of the puzzle. A few of the WHSs we own among us have the same stamper, but most of them did not. Sometimes, there was a family resemblance, like a country of origin. Also, we noticed that the majority of the WHSs we played were NOT original pressings.
It confirmed something we all learned at great expense: Chasing pressings and stampers recommended on the forums, or going based on rarity/price, is simply not a reliable guide to good sound. It lets you tell yourself you have a sought-after record, but it doesn’t allow you to conclude you have a great-sounding copy of that title. The guy on the forum might be right that his copy of that stamper sounds amazing, but that’s little guarantee the one you buy also will.
So, what’s my advice? If you’ve got a collection of hot stampers, do what I did, and invite over some buddies to listen. The second-best place to have a stack of Better Records is on your friend’s shelf.
Aaron
Aaron,
Naturally this all comes as music (ahem) to my ears.
Many years ago we noted that there are two ideas that we have found to be at the heart of building a high quality record collection.
One is to appreciate at the deepest level that no two records sound the same, which is something that every audiophile must come to learn through their own experience. You yourself have proven it once again by playing multiple White Hot Stamper pressings and noting the differences among them. It’s clear to you now, if it were ever in doubt, that even the best of the best copies of a given album do not sound exactly the same.
Instead, as you discovered, they all have strengths and weaknesses.
The strengths of any given copy must be in the most important areas of reproduction, such that the music does not suffer in any way. (Pressings of recordings that must have plenty of bass to sound their best cannot win shootouts without plenty of bass, etc.)
The weaknesses can be in areas that are not as critical to the music. (Soundstaging for some, three-dimensionality for others, etc.)
In other words, a record can win a shootout and earn our highest grade of 3 pluses with sound that is less than perfect.
Less than perfect is the nature of things. That cannot be the standard for judging a record — or anything else for that matter — in the real world.








